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Aug 27, 2012
08/12
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in the united states in contrast with the new technologies that we've had, we have a bit of a supply boom, an energy supply boom in the united states, and going back to your original question, the impact of the potential gulf coast hurricane on energy prices, i think the price response will be muted this time as a consequence of shale oil and shale gas production in various regions of the united states, outside of the traditional producing zones in the gulf. so i think any price impact of the gulf on near term energy prices in the united states will be much more muted. >> but the same factors that you just talked about haven't muted the overall move higher globally because of what you're seeing in other countries. so it won't apply here but it hasn't helped in the other situation. >> that's correct. if you look on a global basis, the benchmarks for global crude oil prices brent are much higher than u.s. domestic prices reflecting a tightness in oil markets overall. that's as i say partly a function of constrained supply from national oil company under investment and partly a conseque
in the united states in contrast with the new technologies that we've had, we have a bit of a supply boom, an energy supply boom in the united states, and going back to your original question, the impact of the potential gulf coast hurricane on energy prices, i think the price response will be muted this time as a consequence of shale oil and shale gas production in various regions of the united states, outside of the traditional producing zones in the gulf. so i think any price impact of the...
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Aug 22, 2012
08/12
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we can do the same thing in the united states. you can build right now on the cheapest energy in the united states, you can build your economy kmi back on cheap energy. >> boone, give us one thing be we could do tomorrow if congress and the president would just come together that would make this country better when it comes to energy? give us the one thing. >> you see, i've almost given up on congress doing anything. >> you're not the only one. >> i gave a very simple plan, get the heavy duty trucks -- that's 3 million barrels a day if you took the 8 million trucks. people say, no, no, we don't want that. >> put 3 million in context. what is that relative? >> 4.5 million is what we import daily from opec. sfwlp so three quarters of our import? >> no, no, our imports are about 9 million. >> let's assume there's a deficit, we transfer the -- you not only create the jobs in the bachen area that boone highlighted, manned day that american heavy truck is? >> you have mandate, they up up and run. i would say give them a tax credit of 24
we can do the same thing in the united states. you can build right now on the cheapest energy in the united states, you can build your economy kmi back on cheap energy. >> boone, give us one thing be we could do tomorrow if congress and the president would just come together that would make this country better when it comes to energy? give us the one thing. >> you see, i've almost given up on congress doing anything. >> you're not the only one. >> i gave a very simple...
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Aug 28, 2012
08/12
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i support that status for the united states. it's an exceptional -- american exceptionism is something i believe in. >> you know what? that wasn't just a speech, either, was it? >> reporter: it was not. it's true. >> that's something i've always wanted to hear from you. >> reporter: it's true. >> i appreciate that. >> it's increased by the election of mitt romney, isn't that true, john? >> know -- >> that's judd gregg. >> reporter: if you were the son of an iwo jima marine, how could you believe anything else? >> that i didn't know. i'm the son of a guy that was in battle of the bulge and froze his feet and what did we do? >> reporter: we yak on tv. >> exactly. >> reporter: with a lot of courage. >> when a guy like neil armstrong passes, you know, i try to explain to my kids and the differences are pretty obvious. although we're not alone in being fat, cushy overpaid low lives, john. >> your kids will never see a person on the moon which is incredible when you think about it. i mean, for us, in our generation, going to the moon
i support that status for the united states. it's an exceptional -- american exceptionism is something i believe in. >> you know what? that wasn't just a speech, either, was it? >> reporter: it was not. it's true. >> that's something i've always wanted to hear from you. >> reporter: it's true. >> i appreciate that. >> it's increased by the election of mitt romney, isn't that true, john? >> know -- >> that's judd gregg. >> reporter: if you...
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Aug 24, 2012
08/12
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in the united states we have an automatic opt out. the assumption is if your license doesn't say i'm a donor you're assumed to not be a donor. in some countries in western europe like spain, if your license does nothing the assumption is you are a donor, automatic opt in. in spain they have twice the availability of organs. if we just look at kidneys for instance, dialysis across this country and medicare costs a very large amount of money. a transplant for one time is expensive. over the lifetime of a patient a transplant saves medicare system between $300,000 and $500,000 a lifetime. with the number of additional organs we get from an opt in instead of opt out policy we'd save between $3 billion and $5 billion in health care a year, $30 billion to $50 billion over ten years. >> you can see the same thing for hearts. more people die on the waiting list for a heart transplant than are heart transplanted and do well and they're now taking people out 10, 15, 20 years very successfully. >> what is the hold up? how do we increase it? more
in the united states we have an automatic opt out. the assumption is if your license doesn't say i'm a donor you're assumed to not be a donor. in some countries in western europe like spain, if your license does nothing the assumption is you are a donor, automatic opt in. in spain they have twice the availability of organs. if we just look at kidneys for instance, dialysis across this country and medicare costs a very large amount of money. a transplant for one time is expensive. over the...
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Jul 31, 2012
07/12
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states treasury and the united states public will back the dollars for their value is there and i don't think the gold standard is going to be a solution. >> i believe in faith, very strongly. >> i just want to point out the most important thing for the dollar is the policies that boost it. >> ben bernanke doesn't look at the exchange rate, james is right and i don't see why they can't have a dollar price rule, stable money targeting the dollar against gold or if you want a larger basket of commodities it would all be an improvement. right this second, with the dollar rising sharply in the last what, four, five, six weeks, that's not the issue. it's probably -- >> inflation is such a non-issue. >> all right, we're -- >> there's a deflation pressure. >> we're just started. >> i know. you two together, it's like pointing two clock radios at each other and both turned on loud. >> that's why i'm so worried. >> you know who is here? daniel so sorry, guys. >> i guest host, i anchor and you have domino's and dunkin' donuts. you come in and some classy food comes to the table. >> what does that
states treasury and the united states public will back the dollars for their value is there and i don't think the gold standard is going to be a solution. >> i believe in faith, very strongly. >> i just want to point out the most important thing for the dollar is the policies that boost it. >> ben bernanke doesn't look at the exchange rate, james is right and i don't see why they can't have a dollar price rule, stable money targeting the dollar against gold or if you want a...
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Aug 23, 2012
08/12
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>> we're in 20 markets, 20 of the largest markets in the united states, we are planning to be across the entire united states within the next 12 months. >> and you have big guns like jeff bezos, one of the smartest people probably on the planet. >> yes. >> if you have him buying into it, what does that do in terms of trying to get investors to take you seriously? >> obviously they're great people to learn from, so we figured jeff bezos revolutionized e-commerce and mark benihoff the software industry, and mark thiel consumer finance, paypal, and they're all revolutionizing the business so for us we're thinking big. health care is a $6. trillion industry globally, and we sit between the patient and the doctor and this industry and there's so much room to innovate, so many things people hoped for in health care. >> it's worth pointing out the macro economics of this, you effectively expanded the supply of doctors. >> absolutely. >> by getting rid of the down time and the wasted time, which has price effects and everything else like that. >> it's a huge impact of health care reform, des
>> we're in 20 markets, 20 of the largest markets in the united states, we are planning to be across the entire united states within the next 12 months. >> and you have big guns like jeff bezos, one of the smartest people probably on the planet. >> yes. >> if you have him buying into it, what does that do in terms of trying to get investors to take you seriously? >> obviously they're great people to learn from, so we figured jeff bezos revolutionized e-commerce and...
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Aug 29, 2012
08/12
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i think that's the way he's going to be as president of the the united states. we've got tremendous problems in the nation, 23 million people unemployed or underemployed, trillions in deficits year after year. unlike the current administration at that likes to run away from the problems and give speeches, mitt romney is going to confront the problems just as chris christie did in new jersey and solve they. ann romney said it very well, he will not fail. >> what time are you speaking? >> i'm speaking at 8:00 but it keep changes. i don't know. >> maybe they're not going to say to you you were involved with the big companies. i haven't heard any good things about big companies. all i hear about it small business. it's almost like big multi-nationals are not what -- they're not what either party wants to seem affiliated with because i guess they just seem to buy influence or something. all i hear about are small businesses. >> well, mitt romney talks about some very important, use for all business and that has to do with a territorial tax and simplifying our corpora
i think that's the way he's going to be as president of the the united states. we've got tremendous problems in the nation, 23 million people unemployed or underemployed, trillions in deficits year after year. unlike the current administration at that likes to run away from the problems and give speeches, mitt romney is going to confront the problems just as chris christie did in new jersey and solve they. ann romney said it very well, he will not fail. >> what time are you speaking?...
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Sep 12, 2012
09/12
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was one of the worst economic decisions in the history of the united states. on where we go from here. >>> creating job opportunities in a world of technology. >> just what i need. let's do that. >> former aol boss with a plan to pave the way for the next generation of america's workforce. >> and tracking the fed's next steps. find out what fed watchers and experts are saying in the latest cnbc fed survey. the second hour of "squawk box" begins right now. >>> good morning, everybody. welcome back to "squawk box" on cnbc. i'm becky quick, the futures are indicated higher today even after the gains we saw yesterday. right now the dow futures up by close to 30 points. and the nasdaq is up by about 11 points right now. let's get right to your morning headlines. european shares have hit 14-month highs this morning after a german court ruled that the country could proceed with ratification of a european bailout fund. the german parliament could veto any future increase, but a lot of people taking this as a winning right now. in the meantime, back here in the united
was one of the worst economic decisions in the history of the united states. on where we go from here. >>> creating job opportunities in a world of technology. >> just what i need. let's do that. >> former aol boss with a plan to pave the way for the next generation of america's workforce. >> and tracking the fed's next steps. find out what fed watchers and experts are saying in the latest cnbc fed survey. the second hour of "squawk box" begins right now....
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Aug 31, 2012
08/12
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you said the thing that's made this, greased the incredible economic machinery of the united states was not what. but it was immigrants, right? you were saying the president thinks it's what and actually -- dpsh. >> the whole idea the government has to facilitate the system and make it possible for people to earn their success. it's nonsense. >> what are we doing wrong with immigration? >> making it harder for people to come into the country and create jobs and opportunity. every study shows immigrants that come in, skilled create three and five jobs for native born americans. i'd staple a green card to every college degree, take away their passports practically, stay in america, please. >> but you meant staple it to the degree. >> staple it to anything where it will stick, but this is the problem we have with immigration, fundamentally one of the things that we know is the most entrepreneurial act ever is immigration. you're putting everything at risk. entrepreneurs put capital at risk in search much explosive rewards that have an uncertain origin. that's the immigration experience, pu
you said the thing that's made this, greased the incredible economic machinery of the united states was not what. but it was immigrants, right? you were saying the president thinks it's what and actually -- dpsh. >> the whole idea the government has to facilitate the system and make it possible for people to earn their success. it's nonsense. >> what are we doing wrong with immigration? >> making it harder for people to come into the country and create jobs and opportunity....
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Aug 30, 2012
08/12
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we ought to immediately approve the keystone excel pipeline, bring that energy into the united states, but we have an opportunity to be a net energy exporter with what we have in terms of natural gas, in terms of uranium, oil, coal, all of those things, and we need it all but we ought to be focused on energy and the president's plan and his policies have been those that actually make energy more expensive, with his regulations that continue to come out of the epa, they're burdensome, they're expen expensive, time consuming. we need to make it easier and cheaper for the private sector to create jobs and a lot of that in congress is dismantling the regulations. >> what happened if the president is reelected, senator, what is the first order of business come november? >> well, the president will then lame duck session i think try to put a number of things through because i think we're going to pick up senate seats in the republican party so he's going to try to work through an agenda, if he can reelected and try to get a lot done in what would be a busy lame duck session. >> what happens
we ought to immediately approve the keystone excel pipeline, bring that energy into the united states, but we have an opportunity to be a net energy exporter with what we have in terms of natural gas, in terms of uranium, oil, coal, all of those things, and we need it all but we ought to be focused on energy and the president's plan and his policies have been those that actually make energy more expensive, with his regulations that continue to come out of the epa, they're burdensome, they're...
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Sep 5, 2012
09/12
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united states continued a four-year slide to the seventh spot. separately, a judge ruling amr can abandon its pilot's union contract. saying the bankrupt parent of american airlines corrected certain issues that caused him to reject the same request in the past. amr is trying to save more than $1 billion a year in labor costs. it can unilaterally impose work terms on its pilot, all is happening as talks between amr and u.s. air continue. >>> in the meantime, a very complicated story. we've been trying to follow the twists and turns. the fbi now says there is no evidence to support claims that hacking group anonymous infiltrated an fbi agent's laptop and lifted data for more than 12 million apple products. however the front page of "the financial times" lays it out and says hackers embarrass apple with this data release. there were over a million different devices, numbers were published online. this is a story that has many odd twists. the hackers said they would not give any interviews about this breach until a gawker posed with a ballet tutu wi
united states continued a four-year slide to the seventh spot. separately, a judge ruling amr can abandon its pilot's union contract. saying the bankrupt parent of american airlines corrected certain issues that caused him to reject the same request in the past. amr is trying to save more than $1 billion a year in labor costs. it can unilaterally impose work terms on its pilot, all is happening as talks between amr and u.s. air continue. >>> in the meantime, a very complicated story....